The Strand

A Biography

Authors:
Geoff Browell
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Eileen Chanin
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The Strand was at the outset of London’s post-Roman history the link connecting Westminster and the City of London and it remains the backbone of the capital. An archetype of urban advancement, it has today been redesigned with a new green park at its east end. The Strand’s parishes reflected the intense religiosity of medieval society. Having harboured foremost cartographers and artists in the seventeenth century, the Strand became a printmaking centre in the eighteenth century. Standards of medical training had been very variable and so were tightened in the first half of the nineteenth century. The celebrities associated with its latest palaces continually stoked Edwardian impressions of the Strand once again being a ‘golden mile’. At one time a mile-long art gallery and museum, the Strand was put on the world stage to make treaties in a new age of exploration and amid broken religious promises.

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